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19 December 2021 Worship Livestreaming Video

Due to the impact of the COVID-19 (coronavirus) pandemic, we have begun to broadcast a livestream video of our Sunday morning worship services. This worship video will be available live and in recorded formats. For our livestream video of our worship services, we are using Facebook Live.  One does not have to log into Facebook … Continue reading "19 December 2021 Worship Livestreaming Video"
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12 December 2021 Worship Livestreaming Video

Due to the impact of the COVID-19 (coronavirus) pandemic, we have begun to broadcast a livestream video of our Sunday morning worship services. This worship video will be available live and in recorded formats. For our livestream video of our worship services, we are using Facebook Live.  One does not have to log into Facebook … Continue reading "12 December 2021 Worship Livestreaming Video"
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5 December 2021 Worship Livestreaming Video

Due to the impact of the COVID-19 (coronavirus) pandemic, we have begun to broadcast a livestream video of our Sunday morning worship services. This worship video will be available live and in recorded formats. For our livestream video of our worship services, we are using Facebook Live.  One does not have to log into Facebook … Continue reading "5 December 2021 Worship Livestreaming Video"
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28 November 2021 Worship Livestreaming Video

Due to the impact of the COVID-19 (coronavirus) pandemic, we have begun to broadcast a livestream video of our Sunday morning worship services. This worship video will be available live and in recorded formats. For our livestream video of our worship services, we are using Facebook Live.  One does not have to log into Facebook … Continue reading "28 November 2021 Worship Livestreaming Video"
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Tuatha Dea “Irish Eyes” release highlights new dimension

TWH sits down with the band, Tuatha Dea, to discuss their new release and progression as a group on their ten-year anniversary. Continue reading Tuatha Dea “Irish Eyes” release highlights new dimension at The Wild Hunt.
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Weekly Bread #152

Happy New Year! Here we go again. We don’t know what this year will bring, but the one thing we know is that it will bring something. We’ll adjust to it or not, depending on whatever remains of our flexibility and hope. As long as I can, however, I am going to spend as much […]
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KEIZAN JOKIN’S ZAZEN YOJINKI What to be aware of in zazen, sitting meditation

      KEIZAN JOKIN’S ZAZEN YOJINKIWhat to be aware of in zazen, sitting meditation Translated by Thomas ClearyTimeless Spring : A Soto Zen anthology. Weatherhill, Tokyo-New York, 1980, pp. 112-125. (A couple of years ago I shared the translation of this text by the Venerable Reiho Masunaga. Possibly the most important early text on […]
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Dale Arnink’s Amazing Grace

Dr. Dale Arnink, who passed away on November 3, 2021, was our Minister Emeritus for more than 20 years, following 24 years as our called minister between 1976-2000. In August 2005, just before he departed Los Alamos for a few years to provide interim service at the church in Rio Rancho, Dale delivered a remarkable sermon on why grace is not just amazing, but vital. Join us to hear this sermon, as recorded.
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Un flambeau, Jeannette, Isabelle (Bring a Torch, Jeannette, Isabella)— Murfin Winter Holidays Music Festival

  Un flambeau, Jeannette, Isabelle (Bring a Torch, Jeannette, Isabella) by  Renée Fleming and the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. Note —Now that we have gotten past our New Year’s posts, it’s a good time to remind folks that we are still in the Twelve Days of Christmas and traditional, religious, and secular songs are still appropriate! The French have a very deep traditionof Christmas carols.   In fact, the word carol comes from French country dances that celebrated events throughout the year, but especially during Christmas.   Words were put to these lively dances creating songs very different from the announcement and nativity hymns sung for masses .   Coming from the peasantry the songs often celebrated the lowly witnesses or p...
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Online All-Ages Worship (2 January 2022)

Please join us on Sunday (2 January 2022) at 11:00 AM for “What Ties It All Together?” by Rev, Barbara Jarrell. Our service will be livestreamed on Facebook Live here. We will not be open for in-person worship service during the month of January 2022. Due to how transmissible the Omicron COVID variant is along … Continue reading "Online All-Ages Worship (2 January 2022)"
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No Online Adult Religious Education on 2 January 2022 — Class Resumes 9 January 2022

For Sunday (2 January 2022), our adult religious education class is taking a holiday break. On 9 January 2022, we will resume our discussion of the podcast episodes Learning How to See with Rev. Brian McLaren, Father Richard Rohr, and Rev. Jacqui Lewis. They are discussing the 13 kinds of bias that Rev. Barbara mentioned … Continue reading "No Online Adult Religious Education on 2 January 2022 — Class Resumes 9 January 2022"
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Children and Youth Religious Education Updates

We will continue to watch the local COVID numbers.  We feel encouraged by the cooling weather and the possibility of comfortable outdoor activities. We are not resuming regular classes for children and youth at this time because our classrooms are too small to be safe for unvaccinated children, and because we want some time to … Continue reading "Children and Youth Religious Education Updates"
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Zoom Lunch Moving to Tuesdays (4 January 2022)

Please join us next Tuesday (4 January 2022) at 12 noon for our weekly Zoom lunch (please note the new day of the week for Zoom lunch). Bring your lunch and meet up with your All Souls friends, have lunch, and just catch up.
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Volunteers for Youth Justice — January 2022 Give-Away-The-Plate Recipient

Our monthly Give Away the Plate contributions go to a local organization that best exemplifies our Unitarian Universalist principles and values through their work in our community. Our January 2022 Give Away the Plate recipient is Volunteers for Youth Justice and will go toward our sponsorship of their annual Gumbo Gladiators fundraiser. Volunteers for Youth … Continue reading "Volunteers for Youth Justice — January 2022 Give-Away-The-Plate Recipient"
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Receive

Receiving an invitation is so fun! Whether by snail mail or electronically, I always get excited when I open an invitation. When is the occasion? Will I be able to go? Who else will be there? What will we do? What do you hope to receive today?
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Editorial: A look ahead into 2022

Happy New Year from The Wild Hunt! Editor-in-Chief Manny Tejeda-Moreno lays out where he sees 2022 going. Continue reading Editorial: A look ahead into 2022 at The Wild Hunt.
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Recollecting the Zen Pioneer Houn Jiyu Kennett

      Peggy Teresa Nancy Kennett was born at St Leonards-on-Sea, Sussex, England, on this day, the 1st of January, in 1924. Houn Jiyu Kennett was the first women Soto Zen master to teach in the West. Her teaching career also opens questions of orthodoxy and authority that begin to define the outer limits […]
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John Keat’s ‘negative capability’ and COVID-19

John Keats by Joseph Severn A short  “ thought for the day” offered to the Cambridge Unitarian Church as part of the Sunday Service of Mindful   Meditation  (Click on this link to hear a recorded version of the following piece) —o0o— Whilst returning home from a Christmas pantomime in 1817 the poet John Keats (1795-1821) got into conversation with his friend Charles Wentworth Dilke (1789-1864). Thanks to a letter to his brothers we know that during this conversation several things ‘dovetailed’ in Keats’ mind, and “at once it struck me, what quality went to form a Man of Achievement especially in Literature & which Shakespeare possessed so enormously — I mean Negative Capability, that is when a man is capable of bein...
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Who Am I to Write about Race?

1964: My brother and I at a civil rights march. Either my sign is turned sideways to the camera or it fell off. I first learned about race from my father when I was a small boy who had just moved to Florida in 1959. He explained that ignorant people think skin color makes a difference in whether one person is the equal of another, and the most ignorant people refer to black people as “niggers”, and if he ever heard me use that word, I would get the worst spanking of my life. My family got caught up in the civil rights struggle in the early 1960s. I went on my first march for integration in 1964 when I was nine. At one point, we could not get fire insurance because word was out that the Klan would burn us down. They never did, perhap...
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Divination for 2022

What we accomplish in 2022 will not be done with flash and dramatics. It will be done with quiet spiritual practice, with a commitment to deeper things, and by doing the kind of things that require careful planning and stealth.
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Unitarians in Palo Alto, 1926-1947

Part Six of a history I’m writing, telling the story of Unitarians in Palo Alto from the founding of the town in 1891 up to the dissolution of the old Unitarian Church of Palo Alto in 1934. If you want the footnotes, you’ll have to wait until the print version of this history comes out … Continue reading "Unitarians in Palo Alto, 1926-1947"
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New Year’s Day by Taylor Swift—Murfin Winter Holidays Music Festival

                                                       New Year's Day by Taylor Swift.   For Americans New Year’s Day is a kind of low key and lethargic holiday.   Many New Year’s Eve revelers nurse hangovers.   For others it’s a spend the day in pajamas and robe affair to veg out in front of the tube and watch the Rose Parade and endless college bowl games.    It is the biggest day of the year for ordering pizza delivery.   New Year's Eve has long been an amateur night with excessive drinking and mixing of libations, National Hangover Day is an appropriate designation for the first day of the year. There have not been many songs for January 1.   For years we were stuck with U2’s first big ...
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Invitation

The power of invitation and intention go along with each other. On this, the first day of a new year, we have an opportunity to set our intentions for 2022–to invite into our year qualities that will guide us in the months to come. What are you inviting into your life in 2022?
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Hello, I must be going.

"Hello, babies. Welcome to Earth. It's hot in the summer and cold in the winter. It's round and wet and crowded. At the outside, babies, you've got about a hundred years here. There's only one rule that I know of, babies—God damn it, you've got to be kind." - Kurt Vonnegut This site has been working hard, so it's retiring now.
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No Meditation Group on 1 January 2022 — Meditation Resumes 8 January 2022

The meditation group led by Larry Androes will not be meeting on New Years Day (Saturday, 1 January 2022). This meditation group will resume meeting on Saturday, 8 January 2022. This group is a sitting Buddhist meditation including a brief introduction to mindfulness meditation, 20 minutes of sitting, and followed by a weekly teaching. The … Continue reading "No Meditation Group on 1 January 2022 — Meditation Resumes 8 January 2022"
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Two actions for 2022

I don’t usually do New Year’s resolutions, but I’ve thought of two that would improve my life that I think I can actually carry through for an entire year. One is to draw a leaf every day of the year. In this I was inspired by my friend Janet, who drew her way through a […]
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Courage

I am finally embarking on a project to go through all of my papers, now in boxes in the basement. These range from files that I brought from my office when I retired 3 1/2 years ago, to boxes that I have carried around since college. This week I have been going through a box […]
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The stories that shaped 2021: a Pagan perspective

TWH Editor-in-Chief Manny Tejeda-Moreno reviews the biggest stories from 2021. Continue reading The stories that shaped 2021: a Pagan perspective at The Wild Hunt.
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Why Not Become Fire: A Meditation for New Year’s Eve

    Today is the last day of the year of our Lord 2021. I’m not going to say good riddance. Well. At least not without some qualification. For many of us it’s been hard. No doubt. And there’s not a lot of evidence it’s going to get better any time soon. But. And. In […]
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Socialists Don’t Divide Us by Class. Capitalists Do.

When I talk about class, defenders of capitalism complain that socialists want to divide us. They don’t understand that socialists are universalists who want to unite everyone by ending the class system that capitalists maintain.When capitalists say talking about class divides us, they’re refusing to admit there’s a difference between who we are and what we own. Terms like rich and poor or
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Top 10 Best Books Read in 2021

The following are the top ten best books I’ve read since this time last year–in alphabetical order by the author’s last name because agonizing over a precise order would take all the fun out of remembering these books: 1. One Drop: Shifting the Lens on Race by Yaba Blay 2. Atlas of the Heart: Mapping […]
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What Liberals Miss in King’s Birmingham Jail Letter

Martin Luther King’s Letter from Birmingham Jail is often cited by people who miss one or more of three essential points:1. King criticized black middle-class people as well as whiteSome say King was only criticizing white moderates and quote bits like this:I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro’s great stumbling block in his stride toward freedom is not the White
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Untouched and Still Possible

The cusp of the New Year is always a moment for pause and reflection, looking back over the winding paths that have brought us to the present while gazing ahead toward the road stretching before us. Here at Side With Love, we too join in this practice of breathing in all that has been, and exhaling our hopes for all that is to come.  2021 brought us both the unprecedented, and the all-too-familiar. And while we could catalogue all the heartbreaks of what it means to be alive in this moment, at this turning of the year, your Side With Love team is choosing to look back on this year through the lens of gratitude. Today, we reflect and offer our deep thankfulness for our life-giving faith, for the movements that are leading us and imaginin...
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Auld Lang Syne—Murfin Winter Holidays Music Festival

                                                                 Auld Layng Syne performed by the Band of the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards. Although there have occasionally been other songs that made feeble attempts to displace it, New Year’s Eve belongs firmly to Auld Lang Syne and it promises to remain supreme in defianceof any and all changes in musical tastes and styles. Most of us know that the song comes from a poemby the revered Ploughman Poet and Scottish national icon Robert Burns.  But you may not know the whole story.                                     The Scottish Ploughman Poet Robert Burns. After his first blush of fame with the publication of his Kilarnock Poem...
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Kuumba

The sixth day of Kwanzaa celebrates Kuumba, the principle of creativity. People are instructed to reflect on what they can do to leave their communities more beautiful and whole. What are the ways you can add beauty to the world (and to your community) in 2022?
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A tarot spread for 2022

TWH asked our resident tarot expert and news editor, Star Bustamonte for some spiritual insights on the year ahead, Continue reading A tarot spread for 2022 at The Wild Hunt.
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Tutu’s Legacy Roots Us In the “Precious Gift of Life”

“Do your little bit of good where you are; it’s those little bits of good put together that overwhelm the world.” — Desmond Tutu
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In 2022, UUSC Will Collaborate With Haitian Diaspora

2022 will see UUSC build partnerships in Haiti to lift up civil society organizations and center their leadership.
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Les Misérables Student Edition

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Caste is Race Because It’s Based On Your Parents, Not You

Giveaway285, CC BY-SA 4.0Thinking about prejudice in Igbo society, I had a simple realization: caste is race because it’s about our parents, not us. Most Americans think race is based on what we look like, but the old phenomenon of race-passing shows that’s not true—in this century, Rachel Dolezal and Jessica Krug were able to pass as people of color until their parentage became public knowledge.
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What Are You Doing New Year’s Eve? —Murfin Winter Holidays Music Festival

                                                                      What Are You Doing New Year's Eve  by the Orioles. Back in the day everyone who was not a misanthropeor a shut-in went out on New Year’s Eve.   The toffswore their white ties and tails and elegant evening gowns and furs to don paper hats and dance the night way to orchestras in sprawling Art Deco ballrooms.   At least that is what all of the old movies taught the rest of the Depression and war weary populous.   But those average Joes and Jills also went out and celebrated with their own funny hats and noise makers in urban ballrooms, lodge halls, piano bars, and neighborhood saloons.   And it was not just attractive youn...
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The Tiniest Recollection of the Mad Monk

      It’s the eve of the eve of a new year. At my age with little time to squander, nonetheless I have to say about 2021, goodbye, and good riddance. Although I am not particularly sanguine about how 2022 will shape up. People like to note it is the year, after all, that […]
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The Future

The past is the past and we can not change it.  The future can be different if we choose to make it so.  We can grow a vision of a more peaceful, happier and harmonious future and work toward it.  The mystery is how we trade complacency for action. What is the next thing you … Continue reading The Future
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Tibetan Slavery was Not Better than American Slavery. It was Differently Abominable.

Tibetan slave, working in the field while shacked“I may not be free under Chinese Communism, but I am better off than when I was a slave.” —Wangchuk, quoted in “In Tibet, a Struggle of the Soul”“Old Tibet was dark and cruel, the serfs lived worse than horses and cattle.” —Dechen Chökyi Drönma, the 12th Samding Dorje Phagmo, quoted in “Female living Buddha condemns Dalai Lama”“When the Chinese
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Lawsuits as a tool to mitigate the climate crisis

The number of lawsuits filed in connection with climate change, global warming, and environmental concerns has sky-rocketed in the past decade. Continue reading Lawsuits as a tool to mitigate the climate crisis at The Wild Hunt.
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Sunday, January 2 ~ Group Healing and Transformation on the Labyrinth Path ~ 10:30 a.m.

Sunday, January 2, 10:30 a.m. Group Healing and Transformation on the Labyrinth Path An Online Service with Lay Speaker Karen Szklany Karen’s first introduction to walking a labyrinth path involved a group gathered around creativity and artistic expression, and that has shaped the relationship she has developed with labyrinths over the past 20 years. When the   [ … ] The post Sunday, January 2 ~ Group Healing and Transformation on the Labyrinth Path ~ 10:30 a.m. appeared first on Unitarian Church of Marlborough and Hudson.
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HELLO GOODBYE: Living in the Kali Yuga with a Little Help from the Beatles

      “Hello Goodbye” Living in the Kali Yuga with a Little Help from the Beatles Silvio Nardoni (My friend Silvio Nardoni is a Unitarian Universalist minister as well as a practicing attorney. He shared this with me and I thought it a perfect New Year’s reflection. I asked for permission to share it, […]
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River by Joni Mitchell—Murfin Winter Holidays Music Festival

                                             River by Joni Mitchell.   Last week CBS broadcast the Kennedy Center Honors.   First up for recognition was Joni Mitchell, who now stands and walks with difficulty since recovering from a devastating 2015 brain aneurysm rupture but was in good spiritsas the story of her life unfolded on stage along with many of her finest songs.   Among them was River from her 1971 album Blue sung by Brandi Carlile.   It was a breathtaking, wounded,and personal song off the most highly regarded album of her long career.   It is also a Christmas song like none you ever heard before or since.   Mitchell, of course, is the iconic Canadian singer/songwriter, who emerged from ...
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Top 10 Posts of 2021

The Top 10 posts of 2021 on Under the Ancient Oaks: dealing with troublesome leaders and toxic ancestors, the Law of Attraction, who put the Odal run on the CPAC stage, what kind of a witch do you want to be, and more.
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Ujamaa

Ujamaa, or cooperative economics, is the fourth principle of Kwanzaa. How do you support Black- and brown-owned businesses with your spending?
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Indigenous ceremonial centers destroyed in Colombia

Opposition by Columbia's Indigenous communities to illegal mining, the presence of armed groups in the region, and a proposed dam project results in a series of violent attacks on their sacred ceremonial houses. Continue reading Indigenous ceremonial centers destroyed in Colombia at The Wild Hunt.
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The UU year in review: 2021

Wow. It’s been a year of change. As 2021 winds down, I’ll briefly summarize the changes I’ve seen in Unitarian Universalist congregations — some positive, some not so positive, some neutral. Not-so-positive (A) Enrollments of children and teens appear to be falling precipitously. We don’t yet have official numbers from the year-end certification count, but … Continue reading "The UU year in review: 2021"
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African Slavery was Not Better than American Slavery. It was Differently Abominable.

The Door of No Return, jbdodane, CC BY 2.0“African chiefs were the ones waging war on each other and capturing their own people and selling them. If anyone should apologise it should be the African chiefs.” — Yoweri Museveni, President of Uganda, 1998“We cannot continue to blame the white men, as Africans, particularly the traditional rulers, are not blameless. … In view of the fact that the
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Bodhisattva Fu’s Poems on the Four States

  四相詩Poems on the Four States Bu Fu-Ta-shih [傅大士] (497–569) Fu Ta-shih was a householder, whose teachings and actions led him to be revered as an incarnation of the Bodhisattva Maitreya. Birth Relying upon the ovum, consciousness arises, birth arises from love and desire. In a time now past he grew up, today he returns as […]
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The Seven Principles by Sweet Honey and the Rock—Murfin Winter Holidays Music Festival

                                                       The Seven Principles by Sweet Honey and the Rock. Today is the third day of Kwanzaa which was created in 1966 during the blossoming of a period of Black Nationalism by Maulana Karenga, a Black studies scholar and a leading Los Angeles militant .   Beginning on December 26 and running through January 1, candles are lit representing values.   Each of the values is given a Swahili name.   Today is day three— Ujima (Collective Work and Responsibility) “To build and maintain our community together and make our brothers’ and sisters’ problems our problems, and to solve them together.” A Kwanzaa button from the collection of theNational Museum o...
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Faith

“Because we live with mystery, we trust that which is deeper than we know—which touches our hearts—which steadies us and rekindles our spirits—which, finally, in faith, may be named the love that has laid hold upon us, and will not let us go.” -George Kimmich Beach What will your faith not let go of today? … Continue reading Faith
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Pagan Community Notes: Week of December 27, 2021

In this week's Pagan Community Notes, Happy Kwanzaa! A new documentary about Heartland Pagan Festival, an update on Scottish Parliament's exoneration of witches, and more news! Continue reading Pagan Community Notes: Week of December 27, 2021 at The Wild Hunt.
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A Feast for John the Beloved

      Today, the 27th of December the Roman and Anglican churches mark out as a feast for John the disciple of Jesus, sometimes called the Apostle, sometimes the Evangelist, sometimes the Beloved. The Orthodox celebrate his life in September. I cannot think of him without thinking of John the Revelator… As with all […]
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The Holly and the Ivy Annie Lennox—Murfin Winter Holidays Music Festival

                                                       The Holly and the Ivy sung by Annie Lennox. Today we feature one of the oldest English carols , The Holly and the Ivy.   Its origins are shroudedin the mist of time.   Pagan greenery was anointed with Christian symbolism. The most familiar melody of several that have been set to the is very old and resembles the songs of the Tudor era 1485–1602 which is why it is a favorite of Madrigal Singers . The earliest surviving mention of the song in print occurred in the early 19th Century when collecting folk music became fashionable.  The earliest recorded version of the lyrics was in a broadside published by H. Wadsworth in Birmingham between 1814 and ...
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Connection

“May we know once again that we are not isolated beings but connected, in mystery and miracle, to the universe, to… community and to each other.” -Anonymous What connections do you feel today? How do you remind yourself that you are not isolated?
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The Day After Christmas

    THE DAY AFTER CHRISTMAS A Meditation on What Comes Next James Ishmael Ford Here we are. The day after Christmas. With a cup of coffee in hand I turned to the Associated Press newsfeed. The lead story this morning was that Desmond Tutu, retired Anglican Archbishop of Cape Town, hero of the anti-apartheid […]
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Old-World Magic Transformed My Christmas Eve

Antonio Pagliarulo describes how his Christmas even changed from his Italian family ritual for removing the evil eye. Continue reading Old-World Magic Transformed My Christmas Eve at The Wild Hunt.
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Weekly Bread #152

Don’t get me wrong, but sometimes I feel like a grinch. The holidays are fun, but also hard. Expectations often exceed the reality, but there are small miracles that happen too. We had fun, good times, and some chaos that was stressful. I ate and drank more than I should have. As a result, I […]
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The White Bear Problem Explains Why Anti-racism Training Doesn’t Work

Pcb21, CC BY-SA 3.0Studies of anti-racism training find it doesn’t work or makes racism worse. The reason seems counter-intuitive to anti-racists: Teaching people to think more about race can make them more racist. But the reason is clear if you remember this old observation:“Try to pose for yourself this task: not to think of a polar bear, and you will see that the cursed thing will come to mind
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Be Still and Know…

A repeat of a video sermon from 12/6/2020 - Rev. John shares some thoughts on the importance of pausing amidst the daily rush.  
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Wren in the Furze for Boxing, St. Stephen’s, and Wren Day—Murfin Winter Holidays Music Festival

                                                       The Wren in the Furze by the Chieftains. Today is the second day of the 12 Days of Christmas, a day with multiple personalities as we will see.  The Brits and the residentsof other former pink blotches on Queen Victoria’s globe like many Americans usually spend today, Boxing Day, storming the malls and shops on what is the busiest retail sales day of the year. Disgruntledgift recipients hit the refund and exchange desks while others spend the gift cards and even old fashion cash.   But unlike Yanks they do it on an official National Holiday as a paid day off.  Officially December 26 is just another Bank Holiday.  But Boxing Day is a treasured t...
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The 4 Best Posts of 2021 You Didn’t Read

While I’ve come to accept that sometimes the Pagan community just doesn’t care about something as much as I do, there are times when I find myself screaming “this is important! Why are you not reading this?!”
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Umoja

The first day of the African-American holiday of Kwanzaa asks people to reflect on the principle of Umoja, or unity. Who do you feel unity with? Reflect on what is keeping you from feeling greater unity with all of humanity.
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Online All-Ages Worship (26 December 2021)

Please join us on Sunday (26 December 2021) at 11:00 AM for ‘A 2022 Poetry Survival Kit:  Poems to Get You Through the Year” with Rev. Barbara Jarrell, Susan Caldwell (All Souls Director of Religious Education), and poetry contributions from our members and friends. Our service will be livestreamed on Facebook Live here. For this … Continue reading "Online All-Ages Worship (26 December 2021)"
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No Online Adult Religious Education on 26 December 2021 and 2 January 2022 — Class Resumes 9 January 2022

For this Sunday (26 December 2021) and next Sunday (2 January 2022), our adult religious education class is taking a holiday break. On 9 January 2022, we will resume our discussion of the podcast episodes Learning How to See with Rev. Brian McLaren, Father Richard Rohr, and Rev. Jacqui Lewis. They are discussing the 13 … Continue reading "No Online Adult Religious Education on 26 December 2021 and 2 January 2022 — Class Resumes 9 January 2022"
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Children and Youth Religious Education Updates

We will continue to watch the local COVID numbers.  We feel encouraged by the cooling weather and the possibility of comfortable outdoor activities. We are not resuming regular classes for children and youth at this time because our classrooms are too small to be safe for unvaccinated children, and because we want some time to … Continue reading "Children and Youth Religious Education Updates"
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Zoom Lunch (29 December 2021)

Please join us next Wednesday (29 December 2021) at 12 noon for our weekly Zoom lunch. Bring your lunch and meet up with your All Souls friends, have lunch, and just catch up.
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Column: To Odin at Midwinter

In a special Yuletide offering, Karl Seigfried addresses the god Odin, giving thanks for his gifts at Midwinter. Continue reading Column: To Odin at Midwinter at The Wild Hunt.
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White Christmas

This morning, I went for a walk up in the Santa Cruz Mountains. I was expecting showers, and forecast warned me there might even be thunderstorms. But I was not expecting hail. In places, the tiny hailstones covered the ground, looking so much like snow that I decided it was a white Christmas — just … Continue reading "White Christmas"
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Christmas Letter, 2021

    I see how I wrote a report for Christmas 2017. A sort of Christmas letter. It seems a good time to add an update. Overdue even, perhaps. Jan & I continue to live in Long Beach, California. Christmas Eve began with a heavy rain storm. Something good considering we’ve been in drought conditions […]
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I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day —Murfin Winter Holidays Music Festival

                                                                      I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day sung by Johnny Cash.   This carol is my own personal favorite.   I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day is unusual in that there is no referenceto the Christ child , manger , Holy Family , shepherds, Magi , or even the Herald Angels .   Instead, if focuses on the message of those angels amid the ghastly carnage of war.   It was written not by famed Unitarian hymnist Samuel Longfellow, but by his brother Henry Wadsworth Longfellow , then America’s most honored and adored poet who had created national epics like The Courtship of Miles Standish , The Song of Hiawatha , and Evangeline as well as...
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A pitch to the choir

One of the things that must happen as we get together to sing in harmony with each other is to settle on the perfect pitch. And when someone sings a solo in the choir, they do not perform alone. And so it is with a revolution.  There are times when we take turns at the lead, letting our own voices rise and fall in pitch and in volume, and there are times when we hold back, taking a breath. I want to introduce you to a branch of the choir, led by soloist Joe Youcha, who in the spirit of a great choir does not sing alone. The organization he founded, Teaching with Small Boats Alliance, is a good one. I made a small donation today because I believe they, by building small wooden boats with kids, offer many students a chance to actually lea...
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Joy to the World –Murfin Winter Holidays Music Festival

                                                                        Joy to the World by Whitney Houston and the Georgia Mass Choir. Note —Christmas Day is good for two great carols. Joy to the World is one of the most exuberant of announcement carols and is a perineal favorite for both choir performance and congregational singing at Christmas services .   Yet it is based on two Old Testament verses said to foretell the coming of the Messiah— Psalm 98, 96:11-12 and Genesis 3:17-18—but like other popular carols it is sung as if it is an announcement of the birth of Christ by angels on high.                          English Dissenter and hymnist Isaac Watts published Joy t...
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The Mystery of Christ

In the Bible the term mystery is often used.  It denotes a revealing of something that was unknown, unseen, or hidden. Sometimes the mystery is associated with Christ, who is for many the great community maker.  I wonder how he intentionally took people from different stations in life and created community. I wonder whether successfully … Continue reading The Mystery of Christ
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What’s the meaning of Christmas?

Possum asks Dr. Sharpie about the meaning of Christmas. Then Possum asks some of his other housemates, and Muds finally helps him find the meaning of Christmas. As usual, full text is below the fold. Possum: Hey Sharpie, I’ve been thinking about Christmas. Sharpie: Mmm? Possum: I like the Christmas story and everything. But what’s … Continue reading "What’s the meaning of Christmas?"
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No Meditation Group on 25 December 2021 or 1 January 2022 — Meditation Resumes 8 January 2022

The meditation group led by Larry Androes will not be meeting on Christmas (Saturday, 25 December 2021) or New Years Day (Saturday, 1 January 2022). This meditation group will resume meeting on Saturday, 8 January 2022. This group is a sitting Buddhist meditation including a brief introduction to mindfulness meditation, 20 minutes of sitting, and … Continue reading "No Meditation Group on 25 December 2021 or 1 January 2022 — Meditation Resumes 8 January 2022"
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Christmas Eve by Candlelight

Join us once again for the reading of the Christmas story, with carols and candles.
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Column: Elemental Air

I looked around, trying to find the chimes, and saw a woman walking towards me from the east. Tall and graceful, she carried a book in the bend of her arm. She wore a long, flowing gown of pale green, pale yellow, and white. The chiming grew louder as she drew near, but the sound remained pleasing. As she passed by, I asked, "Do you hear that sound?" She laughed in a way that echoed the chimes and answered, "The question is: do you?" Continue reading Column: Elemental Air at The Wild Hunt.
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The New Being — A short, secular religious thought for Christmas Day

(Click on this link to hear a recorded version of the following piece) —o0o— In 1955, on the eve of his retirement from Union Theological Seminary in New York, the Christian existentialist philosopher and Lutheran Protestant theologian, Paul Tillich (1886–1965), gave an influential sermon called “The New Being.” Not surprisingly, given his Christian upbringing and role, Tillich thought the New Being — or what he also called a New Reality or New Creation — was “certainly manifest in Jesus who is called the Christ.”  But for Tillich — who was fully open to dialogue with other religious traditions and non-Christian philosophies — the manifestation of the New Being was not something confined to the particular, Christi...
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How to End Racism—King was Right that Basic Income is an Essential Element

John Englart (Takver), CC BY 2.0When Race and Economic Opportunity in the United States came out in 2018, many writers wrote about how racially unequal the US still is and ignored the promising findings: There are places in the US that show no signs of racism. We can apply the lessons from them to end racism in the entire US.The researchers, Raj Chetty, Nathaniel Hendren, Maggie R. Jones, and
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Stille Nacht, Silent Night —Murfin Winter Holidays Music Festival

                                                                      Stille Nacht performed by the  Dresdner Kreuzchor [ Choir]. Note —The second of a Christmas Eve two-fer! By far the most beloved and sung of all Western Christmas carols is Silent Night.   It will be sung tonight at Catholic midnight masses, candlelight services like the Tree of Life UU Congregation’s virtual one on Zoom for the second year in a row , by hardy carolers in neighborhood streets, in many versions on Holiday radio, and in family roomsaround the Christmas tree. Two hundred and three years ago Stille Nacht, heilige Nacht was first performed at St. Nicholas parish church in the village Oberndorf on the Salzach R...
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A Meditation for Christmas Eve

      Last year I gathered a couple of my favorite Christmas poems together. They’re still my favorites. As are those illustrations from Everett Patterson and Fritz Eichenberg. The first of the poems is by the mid twentieth century Unitarian Universalist minister Sophia Lyon Fahs. For so the children comeAnd so they have been […]
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a Christmas greeting.

A friend, Knud in Stavanger sent these words from Norwegian poet/lumberjack Hans Børli. ”A good/kind word : a seed. – In a hundred years – birds shall build their nests – in whistling wide branches. – God’s oaks – grow slowly on earth…” May these gentle words serve as my season's greetings to you. In a world where whole forests in the Southeastern US are destroyed and marketed as green energy to feed power plants in Europe, and too many of us are consumed and corrupted by the short term, may we think in longer terms (lengre sikt). May we plant seeds that grow into finer things that nourish our families in more meaningful ways. May we think of the days a hundred years hence in which birds nest in our branches. The image...
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It Came Upon a Midnight Clear—Murfin Winter Holidays Music Festival

                                                       It Came Upon a Midnight Clear sung by Mahalia Jackson.   Note—Both Christmas Eve and Christmas Day deserve bonus two-fer entries! In churches around the world this evening announcement carols will be central to the services.    Many are bold and glorious whether sung by massed choirs or by congregations who know them by heart.   Adeste Fideles ( O Come All Ye Faithful ) and the Hallelujah Chorus from Handel’s Messiah are two of the grander examples.   Although there are plenty of others in Christmas song books , my personal favorite is much more modest. It Came Upon a Midnight Clear is one of the oldest and most beloved of American Christmas ...
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Possible

On the eve of Christmas, Christians around the world over put themselves in a space of possibility. The birth of the infant Jesus is heralded as the birth of new possibilities into the world. What would you do if only it were possible?
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A Hindu Appreciation of Christmas

Because I am working on a writing project I have become obsessed with a small factoid that is completely unrelated to the subject of my writing. Specifically where does the term “Christ Consciousness” come from? I kind of assumed it came from Theosophy. And it might, although a search of pdfs of Madam Blavatsky’s two […]
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Studies show US Christians decreasing in number

According to Pew Research Center, the number of U.S. adult Christians is decreasing, a trend observed in other research. Continue reading Studies show US Christians decreasing in number at The Wild Hunt.
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Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas Judy Garland—Murfin Winter Holidays Music Festival

Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas sung my Judy Garland to Margaret O'Brien in  Meet Me in St.Louis . We are closing in on the big day and haven’t honored some of the greatest secular songs from the Golden Age of American Christmas Music.  In particular we have been remiss in failing to share the greatest performance of a modern Holidaysong ever.  Period. No arguments.  The crown goes to Judy Garland singing Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas to Margaret O’Brien in the 1944 film classic Meet Me in St. Louis. As the Coronavirus pandemic resurgesand rages yet again, the throat catching melancholy of Garland’s performanceis more resonate than ever. In some ways the role of the second daughter Esther of the comfortably midd...
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Pregnant

The baby carried by Mary in the Christian Scripture is more than just a baby. Within her is growing hope for the world. Within her is growing a new way of human relations. What is growing in you?
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Fishy carols

Peter Kasin, the coordinator of the monthly sea chantey singing from San Francisco Maritime Historical Park, sent out a holiday greeting filled with fish puns. I love fish puns. Even though they give some people a haddock, and other people carp about them, and still others say that puns are crappie — I love fish … Continue reading "Fishy carols"
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5 Ways UUSC Had an Impact in 2021

As we approach the end of a challenging year, we reflect on some of the ways our advocates have worked to advance human rights around the world.
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